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Naturalistic follow-up after a trial of medications for opioid use disorder: Medication status, opioid use, and relapse.

Authors :
Greiner, Miranda G.
Shulman, Matisyahu
Choo, Tse-Hwei
Scodes, Jennifer
Pavlicova, Martina
Campbell, Aimee N.C.
Novo, Patricia
Fishman, Marc
Lee, Joshua D.
Rotrosen, John
Nunes, Edward V.
Source :
Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment. Dec2021, Vol. 131, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

<bold>Aim: </bold>This report examined naturalistic opioid use outcomes and utilization of medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) 36 weeks post-randomization in the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN) Extended-Release Naltrexone (XR-NTX) versus Buprenorphine-Naloxone (BUP-NX) for Opioid Treatment trial (CTN-0051, X:BOT).<bold>Design: </bold>X:BOT was a multisite, randomized, 24-week comparative effectiveness trial of BUP-NX (N = 287) and XR-NTX (N = 283). Study medications were discontinued following treatment completion, relapse, or dropout. Participants were encouraged to continue MOUD. This report examined opioid use outcomes in 428 (75%) of the 570 participants who attended the 36-week follow-up visit.<bold>Setting and Participants: </bold>Adults with opioid use disorder recruited from 8 community treatment programs across the United States.<bold>Measurements: </bold>Outcomes included medication status (on/off MOUD), type of MOUD (BUP-NX, XR-NTX, or methadone), abstinence from non-prescribed opioids, opioid use days, relapse, and other substance use 30 days prior to the 36-week visit. Relapse was defined as opioid use for 4 consecutive weeks or 7 consecutive days in the past month. Baseline and clinical variables included opioid use severity, intravenous drug use, study medication assignment, and induction status.<bold>Findings: </bold>Of the 428 participants who completed the 36-week visit, 225 (53%) of participants were receiving MOUD and 203 (47%) were not. Compared to those off medication, participants on medication had fewer opioid use days (4.4 days (SD 9.0) versus 9.8 days (SD 12.1)), fewer met relapse criteria (37 (16.4%) versus 79 (38.9%)), and reported less stimulant use (34 (15.2%) versus 56 (27.7%)) and sedative use (14 (6.3%) versus 31 (15.3%)). There was no difference in abstinence rates between those on or off MOUD. A greater proportion of participants on XR-NTX (47 (53.4%) of 88 participants) were abstinent from non-prescribed opioids compared to those on buprenorphine (28 (23.3%) of 120 participants).<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Naturalistic outcomes data showed that despite potential barriers to continuing treatment in the community, about half of individuals were on opioid use disorder pharmacotherapy at follow-up and those on medication generally had better outcomes. Future research should explore barriers and facilitators to treatment retention in community settings; and developing interventions tailored to improve treatment engagement and adherence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07405472
Volume :
131
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153962040
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsat.2021.108447